Possession of the leaves 1438–Rvolution (≈ 1438)
Except 1765–89 (Carvoisin County).
XVe siècle (seconde moitié)
Presumed reconstruction
Presumed reconstruction XVe siècle (seconde moitié) (≈ 1550)
By Charlot d'Orfeuille, current foundations.
XVIIe–XVIIIe siècles
Campaigns
Campaigns XVIIe–XVIIIe siècles (≈ 1850)
Fireplaces added or modified.
15 décembre 1928
Historical Monument
Historical Monument 15 décembre 1928 (≈ 1928)
Official registration of the house.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Maison dit Logis des Foucault : inscription by order of 15 December 1928
Key figures
Charlot d’Orfeuille - Founder of the Foucault branch
Suspected builder of the mansion (XVe).
Famille d’Orfeuille - Seigneurial owners
From 1438 to the Revolution.
Comte de Carvoisin - Temporary owner
Acquirer between 1765 and 1789.
Origin and history
The home of the Foucaults, located in Sepvret (Deux-Sèvres), is a manor house whose large stonework and stairway tower date mainly from the 16th century. The house body, decorated with a polygonal turret housing a staircase, preserves richly decorated windows from the mid-16th century, only one of which remains in its original state. Inside, the ground floor features a 15th-century fireplace, while the first floor combines Renaissance-style fireplaces and Louis XIII, reflecting successive work campaigns.
The seigneury of Foucault belonged to the Orfeuille family of 1438 during the Revolution, except for the years 1765 to 1789, where it was owned by the Count of Carvoisin. Although the current mansion probably dates back to the second half of the 15th century – as the flamboyant windows, the semi-outbuilding staircase and a fireplace on the ground floor show – no trace of an earlier medieval construction has been identified. The chimneys of the 17th and 18th centuries suggest further renovations, but the house, transformed into a relation property around 1760, then underwent progressive degradation due to lack of maintenance.
Ranked Historic Monument by order of 15 December 1928, the home of the Foucaults illustrates the architectural evolution of a seigneurial residence, marked by late Gothic and Renaissance influences. Its present state, with disparate elements (windows, chimneys, stairs), reveals the strata of its history, from its alleged reconstruction by Charlot d'Orfeuille to its post-revolutionary decline. Approximate localization (estimated at 5/10) and the absence of traces prior to the 15th century, however, limit the precise knowledge of its origins.